Finalized federal rule reduces total duration of short-term health plans to 4 months

HHS rule will apply to short-term limited duration insurance (STLDI) plans sold or issued on or after September 1, 2024

Author: Louise Norris | Date Posted: June 6, 2024

Final federal rule regarding STLDI short-term limited duration insurance

A finalized federal rule announced by the Departments of Treasury, Health and Human Services, and Labor on March 28, will impose new nationwide duration limits on short-term limited duration insurance (STLDI) plans.

The rule – which applies to plans sold or issued on or after September 1, 2024 – will limit STLDI plans to three-month terms, and to total duration – including renewals – of no more than four months.

A “renewal” will include a new policy issued by the same insurer (or another insurer in the same controlled group, meaning they’re treated as a single employer) within 12 months of the effective date of the first policy. So a person will not be able to purchase multiple consecutive policies – a practice known as “stacking” – from the same insurer or an affiliated insurer. This part of the rule helps to avoid scenarios in which consumers enroll in multiple STLDI policies without realizing that it isn’t comprehensive coverage.

Why did the federal government implement this rule?

The changes are designed to ensure that short-term coverage is used to fill a temporary gap between two comprehensive policies, rather than serving as a long-term coverage solution. Since STLDI is “excluded from the definition of individual health insurance” and is thus not regulated by federal rules such as the Affordable Care Act, the No Surprises Act, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, etc., the federal-level consumer protections for STLDI enrollees are limited.

The rule is also intended to make it easier for consumers to distinguish between ACA-compliant individual/family health insurance and STDLI and thus reduce the number of people who inadvertently purchase short-term coverage when trying to buy comprehensive coverage.

STLDI plans sold on or after Sept. 1, 2024 will need to include an updated and comprehensive disclosure notice that highlights the major differences between STLDI and ACA-compliant individual/family health insurance sold through the Marketplace.

The disclosure, which is illustrated on page 102 of the final rule, must be displayed on the first page of the policy/contract and any associated marketing or enrollment materials.

How does the rule affect STLDI plans currently in effect?

Under the new rules, there is no change to STLDI policies that are already in effect, or policies that are sold and issued before Sept. 1, 2024. The current rules continue to apply to those policies.

This means policy durations of plans that are sold and issued prior to Sept. 1, 2024 are up to the states and the insurers as long as the policies don’t have initial terms of more than 364 days or total duration of more than 36 months.

How will state regulations be affected by the rule?

As has been the case with previous federal rules for STLDI, states can impose stricter rules but not more lenient rules regarding STLDI duration.

So for example, a state will be able to limit STLDI to a duration of under four months (or ban them altogether, as some states have already done) or prohibit the sale of a second STLDI policy within 12 months – even if it’s issued by a different insurer. 1